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- Q16385198 subject Q7024750.
- Q16385198 subject Q8084221.
- Q16385198 subject Q8529037.
- Q16385198 subject Q8794650.
- Q16385198 abstract "The Bulpington of Blup, a 1932 novel by H. G. Wells, is a character study analyzing the psychological sources of resistance to Wellsian ideology, and was influenced by Wells's acquaintance with Carl Gustav Jung and his ideas.The inner life of the protagonist, Theodore Bulpington, is dominated by a complex he calls "The Bulpington of Blup." This self-regarding, romantic, heroic personality comes over time to dominate his existence, falsifying his relations with the world. Theodore Bulpington develops into a pretentious fraud who finally affirms a modus vivendi of falsehood: "I am a lie. I accept it. I am a liar in a world of lies." The novel is also of interest for its extended analysis of psychological responses to World War I.The life of Ford Madox Ford inspired some aspects of the novel. The Bulpington of Blup is dedicated to Odette Keun, Wells's lover from 1924 to 1933.Like Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island and The Autocracy of Mr. Parham, The Bulpington of Blup did not sell as well as Wells's earlier novels; these are now among his "least read books," according to biographer David Smith. Wells believed that the novel was as good as Kipps, but critics have not shared this view.".
- Q16385198 author Q42511.
- Q16385198 numberOfPages "414".
- Q16385198 publisher Q378809.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q1249082.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q16238773.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q16387148.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q18126753.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q378809.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q41532.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q42511.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q537112.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q7024750.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q8084221.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q8529037.
- Q16385198 wikiPageWikiLink Q8794650.
- Q16385198 author Q42511.
- Q16385198 name "The Bulpington of Blup".
- Q16385198 pages "414".
- Q16385198 publisher Q378809.
- Q16385198 titleOrig "The Bulpington of Blup: Adventures, Poses, Stresses, Conflicts, and Disaster in a Contemporary Brain".
- Q16385198 type Book.
- Q16385198 type Book.
- Q16385198 type CreativeWork.
- Q16385198 type Book.
- Q16385198 type Work.
- Q16385198 type WrittenWork.
- Q16385198 type Thing.
- Q16385198 type Q386724.
- Q16385198 type Q571.
- Q16385198 comment "The Bulpington of Blup, a 1932 novel by H. G. Wells, is a character study analyzing the psychological sources of resistance to Wellsian ideology, and was influenced by Wells's acquaintance with Carl Gustav Jung and his ideas.The inner life of the protagonist, Theodore Bulpington, is dominated by a complex he calls "The Bulpington of Blup." This self-regarding, romantic, heroic personality comes over time to dominate his existence, falsifying his relations with the world.".
- Q16385198 label "The Bulpington of Blup".
- Q16385198 name "The Bulpington of Blup".
- Q16385198 name "The Bulpington of Blup: Adventures, Poses, Stresses, Conflicts, and Disaster in a Contemporary Brain".